Friday, August 17, 2012

Communication Should Be Easy


In today’s working environment, open communication should be the simplest of tasks keeping all employees in the loop. However, this is a fantasy in most cases because the reality is, everyone has their own priority list and they don’t necessarily align with marketing and PR objectives.

At Hames Sharley, I found this particularly difficult at first. Mostly because as previously mentioned, I was just a student intern and second because I was too shy or intimidated to do the easiest thing and approach a director or colleague to get a simple answer. Since becoming more confident and familiar with everyone there, it has become easier but when you need information quickly, it’s still a hassle trying to convince your target that your two minutes is worth taking them away from a busy schedule of creating designs, submissions etc.

The marketing assistant (Bec), came back to me with a fantastic system I found useful when I’m not getting what I need.

  1. Email the person with the information you require and a deadline
  2. Follow up with an email if the deadline isn’t met
  3. Phone the person if there is no response
  4. If you’re still not getting the information, email them again, copying in a director associated with the task at hand to create a sense of obligation for them to respond
Since this bit of advice which I utilized when I was fairly new and still quite shy, Siaw has told me, just go talk to them. This was the easiest by far. Everyone is approachable and willing to help when you’re face to face. It’s quicker and more information rich because usually more questions not previously thought of can arise through conversations and you gain a better insight into what you’re actually researching through greater clarification of facts. Needless to say, I have sucked it up and taken initiative which in the end has really paid off.

2 comments:

Martine said...

Hi Ashleigh,
It was interesting to see how you dealt with the fact that no one had come back to you with any answers. It seems that is the case in most PR firms. Even the one i'm working in, if you wait for someone to make time for you on their own terms you will never hear back from them. I think that goes for every industry you work in. Only the other day we were waiting to hear from someone who we were hoping to get on board for an event and if we waited around to hear from them (especially since they live on the other side of the world) we would never hear from them. Although i have only been at my internship for 3 weeks now i realise that if you do not ask what they expect or how they want something done (even if you have asked before) then you wont get it right. If you want to show them the best work you can you cannot sit back and think 'let me guess how they want this completed'. It defiantly takes courage and time to feel like you can ask questions but at the end of the day you are there to learn. You also want them to know your there.
I love how the person you work with gave you the steps on how to keep 'hounding' someone. Its the perfect advise and I appreciate that knowledge too.
I think once you have gone through all those steps and you still haven't managed to get hold of the person, only then is it okay, to give up (and im sure the company would appreciate that you tried your best).
We all need confidence, me too. These internships are really good for that because we get thrown in the deep end and next time were in the same situation we will know exactly what to do.

So thank you for the great advice! Keep enjoying it and speaking out... I've learnt that they still put on their pants one leg at a time each morning, just like you. Your there to learn.. nothing to be scared about.

xxx
Martine

Amy Taylor said...

Hi Ashleigh,
I completely understand where you are coming from. Learning to be assertive and taking initiative are in my opinion two of the most important things to learn as an intern. Just asking when you are unsure of something seems so simple and logical , but it can be intimidating to have to ask questions continually. In other work experience i completed outside of this unit i was faced with that same problem , at first i spent most of the time just trying to 'wing it' without asking to many questions when i was unsure. From that i learnt it's always better to just ask.

Good blog,
Amy